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This is a list of routes on Sustrans's National Cycle Network within the United Kingdom. This transport-related list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items . ( August 2016 )
However Sustrans themselves only own around 2% of the paths on the network, the rest being made of existing public highways and rights of way, and permissive paths negotiated by Sustrans with private landowners. In 2017, the Network was used for over 786 million cycling and walking trips, made by 4.4 million people.
National Cycle Network (NCN) Route 76 is a Sustrans National Route that runs from Berwick-upon-Tweed to Kirkcaldy. The route is 168 miles (270 km) in length and is fully open and signed in both directions. Between Dunbar and Kirkcaldy the route is known as the Round the Forth. [1]
Known as the Heads of the Valleys Route, [7] this section of NCR46 has a mixture of major and minor roads as well as off road trails. Out of the 60miles of this route, 40miles are segregated from traffic. This includes towpaths, disused railway trails [8] and tarmac cycle paths. [7] Beginning in Gwent Valley this section of the route ends in ...
National Cycle Network (NCN) Route 66 is a Sustrans National Route that runs from Kingston upon Hull to Manchester via Beverley, York and Leeds. Between Pocklington and York it forms part of the Way of the Roses challenge route. In 1998 the section of route 66 between Hull and York was branded The White Rose cycle route. [1]
This is a list of cycle routes in London that have been waymarked with formal route signage include 'Cycleways' (including 'Cycle Superhighways' and 'Quietways) and the older London Cycle Network, all designated by the local government body Transport for London (TfL), National Cycle Network routes designated by the sustainable transport charity Sustrans, and miscellaneous 'Greenways' created ...
Following The Strand the route once again joins a cycle path beside the main road, heading towards Chatham Historic Dockyard. Following the NCN1 through Rochester the route uses a cycle lane in the road. It then links with National Cycle Route 17 towards Maidstone before crossing the Medway using a cycle path beside the road on a bridge into ...
From Selby to York the route [5] uses the trackbed of the old East Coast Mainline railway, which was bought by Sustrans for £1 and turned into one of its first traffic-free paths. [6] On a 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) section of this path is a scale model of the Solar System. [7] NCN Route 66 provides an alternative route between Hull and York.